Yet there is reason to suspect the early surge at Atletico may be longer-lasting, with a return to Juventus in the Champions League on Tuesday offering a reminder of how one of the game’s most enigmatic talents is, aged 26, still to deliver on his potential.

Strong in the air, hardly sluggish, good with his feet and, at his best, decisive in front of goal, Morata has still struggled to convince an impressive list of managers he is a striker to rely on.

From Jose Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti and Zinedine Zidane at Real Madrid, to Max Allegri at Juventus, and Antonio Conte and Maurizio Sarri at Chelsea, none were prepared to make him their No 1 for an extended period of time.

The problem has not been so much technical or physical – although some believe he could do more with his 6ft 2in frame – but mental, a tendency to feel sorry for himself and hide. The result was too often games, and weeks, passing him by.

At Chelsea, the contrast was all the more stark given he followed Diego Costa and, less directly, Didier Drogba, who each set the standard for the kind of warrior-striker that not only scores goals but fights, harries and hurts the opposition too.

In that sense, Morata will not find any more sympathy at Atletico, where Costa has returned and is now his rival for a place alongside Antoine Griezmann, who would surely post more remarkable figures himself, were he not asked to do so much defensive work.

But Simeone has welcomed Morata with open arms, supporting him before he even arrived while a minority of fans scoffed at his history with Real Madrid. “People can say what they want,” said Simeone in January. “I look for players that serve the club and the team.”

When Morata joined, perhaps because of his time at Real, Atletico seemed eager to frame him as the childhood fan coming home.

There were photos of him with Fernando Torres while Morata posted a picture of himself online as a child wearing the Atletico kit. “With the enthusiasm of a kid,” read the caption.

But for all the talk of his roots, it is performances that will win over the supporters. Simeone cannot afford to be sentimental, with Atletico already seven points behind Barcelona in La Liga and chasing a Champions League final inside their own Wanda Metropolitano. Juventus have a 2-0 deficit to make up in Turin.

For Morata too, feeling at home is likely less about the past and more about the present, a fresh start and the chance to feel wanted again.

“Sometimes you take a lot of turns and I needed a group like this, a coach and a team that trust me,” Morata said. “I’m finally here.”